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A Pennsylvania man has been federally charged with making threats to assault and assassinate President Donald Trump, other U.S. officials and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. 

Shawn Monper, 32, who was arrested on Wednesday, lives in Butler, Pennsylvania, where the president was shot during a campaign rally last July. 

‘I want to applaud the outstanding and courageous investigative work of the FBI and the Butler Township Police Department, who thankfully identified and apprehended this individual before he could carry out his threats against President Trump’s life and the lives of other innocent Americans,’ Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement on Friday. 

She added, ‘Rest assured that whenever and wherever threats of assassination or mass violence occur, this Department of Justice will find, arrest, and prosecute the suspect to the fullest extent of the law and seek the maximum appropriate punishment.’

The FBI was notified about Monper’s YouTube account, for which he used the name ‘Mr Satan,’ on Tuesday and was able to link the account to his home in Butler. 

He made several threatening statements between Jan. 15 and April 5, including that he was ‘going to assassinate’ Trump ‘myself,’ ‘ICE are terrorist people, we need to start killing them,’ and ‘Eventually im going to do a mass shooting.’

On Feb. 17, he said: ‘Nah, we just need to start killing people, Trump, Elon [Musk], all the heads of agencies Trump appointed, and anyone who stands in the way. Remember, we are the majority, MAGA is a minority of the country, and by the time its time to make the move, they will be weakened, many will be crushed by these policies, and they will want revenge too. American Revolution 2.0.’

The FBI investigation also found that Monper got a firearms permit after Trump’s inauguration, which he commented about on his YouTube channel.

‘I have bought several guns and been stocking up on ammo since Trump got in office,’ he said after the inauguration, further commenting on his account in March, ‘I have been buying 1 gun a month since the election, body armor, and ammo.’

He threatened ICE again on April 1, writing, ‘If I see an armed ice agent, I will consider it a domestic terrorist, and an active shooter and open fire on them.’

The Butler Township Police Department in Pennsylvania are investigating the case along with the FBI. 

Monper is next expected in court on Monday. 

Trump was shot in the ear during a campaign rally in Butler on July 13. The shooter was killed by the Secret Service. A Florida man was also arrested for attempting to assassinate the president in September after he was found armed, lying in wait outside of his golf course in West Palm Beach. 

Last week, another Florida man was arrested for making threats on social media to assassinate Trump.

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Among the biggest headlines from the first round of the 2025 edition of The Masters was Rory McIlroy — just not for the reasons the PGA Tour star would have hoped for.

For much of the day, the Northern Ireland native appeared destined to end his first round at Augusta National Golf Club Thursday as one of the top contenders for the green jacket, but what had been a stellar first 14 holes quickly came apart for the 35 year old. McIlroy had double bogeys on the 15th and 17th holes, dropping him to even par for the day and in a tie for 27th place.

A new day, however, promised a new opportunity for a man still in search of his first Masters championship.

McIlroy has gotten close at golf’s most hallowed event before, finishing second in 2022 and, more famously, holding a four-shot lead on the final day of competition in 2011 before shooting an 8-over 80 on Sunday to finish in a tie for 15th.

With his uneven first round behind him, here’s a look at how McIlroy fared in the tournament’s second round on Friday:

MCILROY: Met with Jack Nicklaus to prepare for Augusta. Here’s what happened

Rory McIlroy scorecard today

After his disastrous finish on Thursday, McIlroy rebounded nicely on Friday, particularly as his round progressed. After going 1-under on the front nine, McIlroy went 5-under on the back nine including finishing under par on four of the first six holes. That hot streak was highlighted by an eagle on the 13th hole.

He finished the round at 6-under for the tournament, putting him in third place behind Justin Rose and Bryson DeChambeau.

Here’s how McIlroy finished after the second round on Friday, including his hole-by-hole score:

  • Friday score: 6-under
  • Overall score: 6-under
  1. 4 (Par)
  2. 4 (Birdie)
  3. 4 (Par)
  4. 3 (Par)
  5. 4 (Par)
  6. 3 (Par)
  7. 4 (Par)
  8. 5 (Par)
  9. 4 (Par)
  10. 3 (Birdie)
  11. 3 (Birdie)
  12. 3 (Par)
  13. 3 (Eagle)
  14. 4 (Par)
  15. 4 (Birdie)
  16. 3 (Par)
  17. 4 (Par)
  18. 4 (Par)

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The NFL has prohibited seven different helmet models for the 2025 regular season following the league’s annual laboratory testing and analysis in conjunction with the NFL Players’ Association.

Three models have been moved into the ‘not recommended’ category. Players who wore ‘not recommended’ helmets – just 2% of the league – between 2021-2024, per the NFL, were 35% more likely to suffer a concussion.

Meanwhile, 10 of the highly recommended helmets can now be used without the need for additional guardian caps because they tested so well, NFL executive vice president for player health and safety Jeff Miller said Friday.

Players, outside of a few select positions, are mandated to wear guardian caps during training camp and practices. Guardian caps were permitted for game use last season.

Last season was ‘a seminal year and a huge step forward in helmet technology and the options available to players,’ Miller said. Nonetheless, the league still has hopes of moving approximately 27% of its players into better-performing helmets prior to the start of the season; that contingent currently uses models that are neither recommended nor prohibited. The engineering work is a joint effort between the experts in the league office and the union.

The NFL would like to outlaw the worse-performing helmets sooner, but the players’ union values its members’ choices, and Miller said the league ‘leans a bit more towards a mandate.’

Before the Super Bowl, the league said concussions had decreased 17% between the 2023 and 2024 seasons. The NFL attributed much of that to the revamped kickoff rule, which led to more kickoffs being returned while keeping the number of concussions on the play the same (8) year-over-year.

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  • From Alabama to Georgia to Notre Dame to defending champion Ohio State, some top teams have unnamed starting quarterbacks. Don’t expect any naming to happen anytime soon.
  • Spring transfer portal opens later this month. That free agency period encourages coaches to keep mum as the word on quarterback competitions.
  • Kirby Smart’s track record offers insight to Georgia’s quarterback situation.

‘Tis the season for “open competition.”

Those two words are on the tip of every college football coach’s tongue, while they scramble for new ways to make it sound as if the backup quarterback nips at the heels of the heir apparent.

From Alabama to Georgia to Notre Dame to defending champion Ohio State, top programs have unnamed starting quarterbacks. Don’t expect any naming to occur anytime soon. Never mind that each of those teams will play a spring game Saturday. That date matters less than what happens four days later: The transfer portal opens for the 10-day spring sweepstakes.

Transfer portal guides rhetoric on quarterback competitions

Roster management tops a coach’s checklist this time of year. Nobody wants his backup quarterback getting sucked into portal’s vacuum, four months before the season kicks off. So, coaches draw out competitions as long as possible – if not on the practice field, than at least with their rhetoric.

At some schools, there’s no hiding reality. You’d be laughed off for trying. So, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian formalized the anointing of Arch Manning as the team’s starter in February. In other breaking news, rainfall made the ground wet.

At Alabama, though, where the Crimson Tide must replace NFL-bound Jalen Milroe? It’s a three-deep competition!

So indicates Kalen DeBoer’s rhetoric, anyway, about veteran Ty Simpson, freshman Keelon Russell and transfer Austin Mack, a former Washington backup who followed DeBoer to Tuscaloosa last year.

“They are all three making some throws, making some big-time throws,” DeBoer said last week.

Sounds just like Notre Dame, where coach Marcus Freeman said each quarterback in his three-headed competition between Steve Angeli, CJ Carr and Kenny Minchey is ‘amazing’ and ‘great.’ Freeman didn’t bother pretending he’d announce a decision soon.

‘I don’t know when it’s going to be (decided),’ Freeman said.

I don’t either, but I know it will be after the portal closes.

How’s the poker face going for Kirby Smart? Well, he described Georgia’s quarterback competition between Gunner Stockton and Ryan Puglisi thusly:

“I think both those guys are doing a great job,” Smart said.

Illuminating.

Now, remember that when Georgia needed a fresh starter in the College Football Playoff after Carson Beck’s injury, Smart elevated Stockton for the job. Puglisi’s next collegiate pass will be his first.

Smart tends to favor experience when making quarterback selections. If that history predicts this competition’s outcome, that’s good news for Stockton. Highly tuned ears might have picked up on this comment about Stockton from the Georgia coach.

‘He knows the inside and out,’ Smart said, in praise of Stockton, ‘and then I get frustrated and impatient when other guys don’t know it like him.’ Smart’s quote was not specifically directed at his quarterback competition, but it nonetheless sounded encouraging for Stockton’s prospects.

Regardless, Smart’s mission is to keep Puglisi believing in his chances to be Georgia’s starting quarterback.

By the sound of it, mission accomplished there.

Puglisi recently told reporters he “definitely” thinks he can win the job.

Smart definitely won’t say he can’t. Georgia’s quarterback depth is dangerously thin behind Stockton and Puglisi, following the transfers of Carson Beck (Miami) and Jaden Rashada after the season.

‘Neck and neck’ quarterback battle at Ohio State. Shocking!

Competition is the word at Ohio State, too, where Ryan Day must replace Will Howard.

Julian Sayin, Lincoln Kienholz and Tavien St. Clair have 14 recruiting stars between them, but no career starts. St. Clair, a freshman who enrolled in January, is no threat to transfer, at least, and Day admitted he’s the longshot in the competition.

But, wouldn’t you know it, Sayin and Kienholz are “neck and neck” by Day’s telling. Simply amazing. Who could have predicted that?

For more insight on Ohio State’s competition, consider that Sayin probably would be headlining Alabama’s quarterback battle, if not for Nick Saban’s retirement spurring Sayin to reconsider his college choice.

Next, peek at the quarterback competition at Missouri, where career backup Sam Horn tossed eight passes in the past three seasons. Five of those passes hit the turf.

Missouri dipped into the transfer portal in the winter and secured Beau Pribula. He gained meaningful playing time last season as Penn State’s backup. Pribula’s arrival spurred Missouri’s former backup, Drew Pyne, to set sail for Bowling Green.

Sounds like an open and shut case that Tigers coach Eliah Drinkwitz nabbed Pribula to be his starting quarterback, but … wait just a second! There’s a Horn o’plenty.

“Those two guys have had a really good competition,” Drinkwitz said recently of Pribula and Horn.

I’m sure that “really good competition” has nothing to with Missouri possessing no quarterback who has ever played, other than Pribula and Horn. I’m also sure Bigfoot exists.

Of course, some quarterbacks can add two plus two and see it equals four and properly assess where they stand on the depth chart, based on whether they practice more with the first string or the backups.

When the portal opens Wednesday, we’ll learn just how well some coaches convinced their quarterbacks that an “open competition” exists.

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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With the final regular-season episode of Inside The NBA, the show prepares to bid farewell to TNT after a 35-year run.

Ernie Johnson, who has hosted Inside the NBA since 1990, paid tribute his TNT coworkers with a heartfelt speech.

‘I want to address all those folks who are watching but also want to do that by addressing,’ Johnson said as he acknowledged a crowd of his coworkers, ‘my friends.’

‘One of the most gratifying things about the whole process is this: We start the NBA on TNT back in 1989, and then we become synonymous with the league. For the fans out there, they think NBA, they think NBA on TNT. That’s why it hurts tonight – to know that’s gone after this next playoff run. …

‘But I will say this: No time for bitterness. It is time for appreciation. It’s time for gratitude. And it has been my pleasure to be one of your coworkers, one of your teammates, and a part of this family. Love you.’

Johnson’s studio partners also paid tribute to Johnson, leading to a standing ovation in his honor.

‘Me, Kenny and Shaq are the luckiest men in the world,’ Charles Barkley said. ‘But the person that makes it and is the reason that we call you the godfather, Ernie Johnson, you are the man.’

As Barkley’s words echoed, the crowd erupted into cheers, chanting ‘Ernie, Ernie’ in agreement with Barkley’s sentiment.

Although TNT will lose the broadcasting rights to the NBA, the popular show ‘Inside the NBA,’ featuring Johnson, Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal and Kenny Smith, will find a new home on ESPN next season. This follows the Walt Disney Company’s renewal of its 11-year NBA media rights deal, which will be effective from the 2025-26 season through the 2035-36 season. As a result of this agreement, Disney will become the primary media rights partner for the NBA.

When do the 2025 NBA Playoffs start?

The first round of the 2025 NBA playoffs starts on April 19. Here are the key dates for the playoffs:

  • April 15: NBA play-in tournament begins
  • April 19: NBA playoffs begin
  • May 5-6: Conference semifinals begin
  • May 20: Western conference finals begin
  • May 21: Eastern conference finals begin
  • June 5: NBA Finals begin
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The Biden administration engaged in a ‘cover-up’ by failing to disclose details about the health of former president Joe Biden, according to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt. 

‘I can tell you there was certainly a lack of transparency from the former president, from the entire former administration,’ Leavitt told reporters Friday. ‘And frankly, a lot of people in this room, when it came to the health in the competence of the former President of the United States, Joe Biden – there was one of the greatest cover-ups and, frankly, political scandals this nation has ever seen. It’s been unraveled in some recent books that are being written by journalists who engaged in that cover-up in scandal, which is quite ironic.’ 

A spokesperson for Biden did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 

New books out have detailed Biden’s mental and physical well-being during his time in the White House. 

‘Uncharted: How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds in the Wildest Campaign in History,’ published Tuesday and authored by former producer for CBS’s 60 Minutes Chris Whipple, claims that the White House kept Biden from socializing with those who previously worked alongside him – a tactic that backfired and contributed to his declining mental agility. 

Leavitt’s remarks come as President Donald Trump is receiving an annual physical at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Friday. The White House says it will provide a readout of the appointment. 

‘But this president is clearly committed to transparency,’ Leavitt said. ‘You in this room see him and hear from him on a daily basis. You in this room know from covering him. It’s hard to keep up with him. He is a machine working around the clock every single day. And the physician, after today’s physical, will provide an update on the report in the effort of transparency.’

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Republicans in Congress are launching a probe into a Biden-era green energy grant program that sent billions in funding to climate groups tied to Democrats and former President Joe Biden’s allies.

GOP leaders on the House Energy and Commerce Committee sent letters to the eight nonprofits awarded grants from the $20 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF), seeking answers to ensure the Biden Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) followed proper ethics and conflict of interest protocols in distributing the funds.

In February, the Trump administration’s EPA announced it would take steps to get the money back, citing concerns over a lack of oversight related to how the money was being disbursed. In the announcement, new EPA administrator Lee Zeldin cited comments from a former Biden EPA political appointee, who described disbursements made through GGRF as akin to ‘tossing gold bars off the Titanic,’ because Biden officials were allegedly trying to get money out the door before Trump took over. 

It was also revealed that $2 billion from GGRF went to a Stacy Abrams-linked group, Power Forward Communities, which had not been established until after the Biden administration announced the GGRF application process. Meanwhile, during Power Forward’s first few months of operations — prior to receiving the funding — the group reported just $100 in revenue.

Climate United, another group that received the most money from the GGRF, roughly $7 billion, currently staffs a former Biden climate advisor who worked during the last two years of the former president’s term. The same group is also run by a CEO with ties to the Obama administration and a board member who was among those invited to Biden’s signing ceremony for his multitrillion-dollar infrastructure bill in 2021.  

Several GGRF grant recipients have ties to Democrats and Biden advisors, and some were reportedly founded shortly before or after the Biden administration announced the program. Meanwhile, these groups, according to Zeldin, had sole discretion on how to use the funds.

House Energy and Commerce Chairman Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., alongside fellow committee members Reps. Gary Palmer of Alabama and Morgan Griffith of Virginia, both Republicans, said in a joint statement that their investigation into the GGRF recipients will be ‘key’ to understanding whether these funds were allocated ‘fairly and impartially to qualified applicants,’ while also helping to determine the manner in which the money has been used. 

‘The Committee has had concerns about the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund program since its creation—including concerns about the program’s unusual structure, a potential lack of due diligence in selecting award recipients, and the recipients’ ability to manage the large influx of federal dollars they received from the EPA,’ the lawmakers said in their statement. 

‘A recent Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee hearing that examined these concerns coupled with the speed with which money was pushed out the door by the Biden Administration’s EPA heightened the Committee’s concerns and raised additional questions about certain Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund recipients.’

Several of the groups that were recipients of GGRF money sued the Trump administration in March over its attempts to rake back the funds. 

Subsequently, Obama-appointed Judge Tanya Chutkan issued a temporary restraining order preventing the EPA from freezing $14 billion in GGRF funds awarded to three of the climate groups.

The Associate Press contributed to this report.

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Is the third time the charm for New York Jets quarterback Justin Fields?

We’ve seen plenty of current journeyman quarterbacks bounce around the NFL before finding a suitable destination.

Baker Mayfield didn’t reach the Pro Bowl until he played for his fourth franchise, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Ironically, two former Jets castaways have, too, revitalized their NFL lives.

There’s some evidence the same success story can occur with Fields.

“Everybody’s journey is different. Nobody’s journey is the same. Those guys it happened for them on their third our fourth team. Of course, I’m definitely hoping for it to happen here in New York,” Fields said to the media during his first press conference since signing with the Jets. “Those guys kept their head down. They didn’t let too many things in the outside world shake them and they flourished of course.”

Sam Darnold, on his fourth club since leaving New York, resuscitated his career with the Minnesota Vikings and earned a contract worth over $100 million with the Seattle Seahawks. Geno Smith revived his career at his fourth stop, the Seattle Seahawks, and is now reunited with Pete Carroll in Las Vegas.

After a rocky three-year stint in Chicago that included a 10-28 record as a starter and no playoff appearances, Fields showed signs of improvement in his lone season in Pittsburgh last year, albeit in a limited sample size. In 10 games, which included six starts, he produced career-bests in completion percentage (65.8) and passer rating (93.3). He was 4-2 as the Steelers starting quarterback before he was benched in favor of Russell Wilson.

Of course, the Jets have notoriously had bad luck at the quarterback position. The Jets haven’t had a QB earn a Pro Bowl nod since Brett Favre in 2008. New York’s started six different quarterbacks since 2022, in a quarterback merry-go-round that was highlighted by the failed Aaron Rodgers experiment. Poor quarterback productions contributed heavily to the team’s NFL-high 14 seasons without a playoff appearance.

However, aside from Fields’ marked progression in 2024, there are two other reasons to be cautiously optimistic this time around.

Fields already possesses a rapport with wide receiver Garrett Wilson from their two years together at Ohio State.

“When I saw him, it’s really just like the old days,” Fields said of Wilson. “I don’t think our relationship skipped a beat. Of course, I’m definitely excited to play with him.”

Maybe most importantly, there’s affirmation that new Jets general manager Darren Mougey and head coach Aaron Glenn chose Fields to be their quarterback after the Bears gave up on him and his Steelers demotion.

It’s a similar type of averment Mayfield, Darnold and Smith received following multiple stops.

“My confidence never left me. I feel like when your confidence leaves you, you have zero chance. You can take however many losses in life and this game, but you can never lose your confidence,” Fields said. “You can never lose your will to work and get things done. No matter how many losses and stuff like that, I’m never gonna lose my confidence in life or in this game.

‘I’m excited to be here and get to work.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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From the Hoodie to no hoodies allowed.

Oftentimes, NFL head coaches in new situations set the tone, standards and expectations for their players immediately. That much is exemplified by new New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel.

Vrabel made sure that his first impression was a lasting one for his players. In his intro speech to Pats players that surfaced this week, the former Titans head coach set some ground rules for his players, including a cell phone policy and proper decorum and respect to staff while in the building.

Among Vrabel’s requests, he mentioned the following:

  • Hoods down while in meetings;
  • No cell phones in meetings or the weight room;
  • Be on time.

Vrabel’s last point in the video was especially poignant; making sure that his players treat the Patriots staff with the utmost respect and dignity. 

‘The training staff, the equipment staff, the kitchen staff – these people are all here to do what? To help you. They’re here to help you do your job. They aren’t here to be your valet, to be your housekeeper, to be your maid, to be your butler. You get where I’m going? We’re going to treat those people with the utmost respect.’

The new Patriots head coach spent a year out of the coaching game after his firing from the Tennessee Titans in 2023. After courtships from the New York Jets and Chicago Bears, the former New England linebacker inked a deal to return to Gillette Stadium, this time as head coach.

Vrabel will look to exceed the successes left by Jerod Mayo, who was fired after a single, 4-13 season at the helm.

We’re still a ways away from finding out if Vrabel’s message is received, but if it is, it certainly won’t be on a cell phone.

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The NBA’s decision to fine Morant $75,000 after multiple gun gestures led to the Memphis Grizzlies guard changing his 3-point celebration to one in which he mimics throwing a grenade. According to Morant, that’s the celebration fans can get used to seeing for the time being.

‘That’s my celebration now until somebody else got a problem with it, and I’ll find another one,’ Morant said at Thursday’s shootaround, according to the Memphis Commercial Appeal, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Morant used the celebration, where he mimics pulling the pin on a grenade, throwing it into the stands and then covering his ears, in Thursday night’s 141-125 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Smith and Barkley reacted to Morant’s new celebration on the ‘NBA on TNT’ show.

‘He has a history that maybe he should leave the celebrations where people might die alone,’ Smith said.

Said Barkley: ‘I know one person’s happy right now. Taylor Jenkins ain’t got to deal with this crap.’

The Grizzlies fired Jenkins as head coach with less than a month remaining in the regular season.

Asked Thursday about his reaction to the fines, Morant smiled, paused and then said: ‘You really want to know? I wasn’t surprised. Just was showing people what’s pretty much been evident for the last two years.’

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